'Has seen' is the verb phrase.
The verb is "to see" and the verb phrase is "had seen."
"Had seen" is the verb phrase. "Never" is an adverb.
"Had seen" is the verb phrase. Never is an adverb.
"was seen" is the verb phrase.
future passive
Have "seen" is a verb phrase, but "seen" is an action verb.
"had never seen" is the verb phrase in the sentence. It consists of the main verb "seen" and the auxiliary verb "had" indicating past tense and a negative adverb "never."
No, it is a verb phrase. You could add an adverb to it, as in "should have seen CLEARLY."
There is no rule about how many you can have.has seen - this verb phrase has twohave been waiting to go - this verb phrase has four.
Yes, "We wanted to see the clouds" is correct as a past tense phrase. The verb "wanted" is in the past tense, and "to see" is the infinitive form of the verb indicating the action that was desired.
They are conjugations of the verb see.The auxiliary verb have forms the present perfect tense of "to see" which is have seen or has seen (the third-person singular form).
To make a verb phrase, another verb that modifies the verb is added to the verb. For example: "I go to the store" becomes "I will go to the store" You can add: a be verb -- was watching, is kept, are used have -- have eaten, have seen has -- has seen, has known will -- will come, will be, will see can -- can come, can buy could -- could walk, could find must -- must walk, must wear had -- had seen, had bought